-
Revlon lenders that received more than half a billion dollars in accidental payments from Citigroup are asking a judge to free up the money he’s already ruled is theirs to keep.
April 9 -
After Wells Fargo became the first of the largest U.S. banks to do away with mandatory arbitration for sexual harassment complaints last year, Goldman Sachs Group is being urged to take steps in the same direction.
April 7 -
Visa and Mastercard are facing fresh opposition from U.S. retailers in a long-running legal fight over the fees merchants pay each time consumers swipe their credit or debit card at checkout.
March 30 -
Federal Savings Bank, the Chicago bank that lent millions of dollars to Paul Manafort under its founder and former longtime CEO, has now sued the former Trump campaign chairman and his wife, seeking to foreclose upon his mansion in the Hamptons.
March 17 -
The decision provides more clarity to noteholders in the state about when the six-year statute of limitations to bring a foreclosure action begins.
February 23 -
The agreement with plaintiff MBIA Insurance resolves a lawsuit tied to the sale of mortgage-backed securities that plummeted in value during the 2008 financial crisis.
February 12 -
A federal judge denied the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's motion to have the case thrown out, saying concerns about the agency's rulemaking process to reform the Community Reinvestment Act have merit.
February 1 -
The company also reported a large fourth-quarter loss that reflected a significant increase in its loan-loss provision.
February 1 -
Driver Management will try for a second straight year to gain a board seat at First United.
January 13 - LIBOR
Some of the world’s biggest banks are urging a U.S. judge not to immediately terminate Libor after a group of borrowers filed suit claiming the benchmark was the work of a “price-fixing cartel.”
January 12